Kensington, Victoria

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Kensington
MelbourneVictoria

The corner of Bellair St and Macaulay Rd is the commercial heart of Kensington and opposite the main railway station.
Population: 8676 (2006) [1]
Postcode: 3031
Area: 3.9 km² (1.5 sq mi)
Property Value: AUD $435,000 [2]
Location: km (2 mi) from Melbourne
LGA:
State District: Melbourne
Federal Division: Melbourne
Suburbs around Kensington:
Flemington Flemington Parkville
Footscray Kensington North Melbourne
Footscray West Melbourne

Kensington is a suburb in the inner-west of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It is shared between the Local Government Areas of the City of Moonee Valley and the City of Melbourne. At the 2006 census, Kensington had a population had a population of 8676.

Kensington was once home to one of Victoria's major abbatoirs and livestock saleyards, as well as an army ordnance depot, and has a strong working-class history. Since the 1970s, these sites fell redundant and made way for one of the last of a series of comprehensive inner-urban redevelopment projects carried out under the auspices of the State government, the Kensington Banks housing estate. Kensington retains a mixture of heavy and light industrial landuses with a gentrifying residential component. It is also the location of one of Melbourne's 1970s public housing estates which comprised a mixture of 12-storey high-rise towers and low-rise walk-up flats. The walk-up blocks have been redeveloped by developer Becton into a mixture of private apartments, townhouses and public housing units.

Contents

[edit] Commerce

The commercial and social heart of Kensington is the Macaulay Road shopping strip, which turns the corner into Bellair Street, opposite Kensington railway station. This short but lively strip has a number of cafes, restaurants and pubs, as well as local supermarkets, newsagents, post office and the Macaulay credit co-operative.

[edit] Educational facilities

Kensington has a government primary school (Kensington North Melbourne PS), a Catholic primary school (Holy Rosary) and a government secondary school (Kensington Community High School).

[edit] Parks and public open spaces

Former Kensington Town Hall - now community centre - from forecourt
Former Kensington Town Hall - now community centre - from forecourt
Victorian terrace houses marching up Gower Street.  All of these boom style terraces were built in 1888.
Victorian terrace houses marching up Gower Street. All of these boom style terraces were built in 1888.

Compared to many other inner-suburbs of Melbourne, Kensington is relatively well-provided with public open space. The major recreational area is J.J. Holland Park, adjacent to South Kensington railway station, which has three ovals, a BMX track, children's play areas, a public swimming pool and a community centre. The Kensington Banks redevelopment has provided a second major public park on the Maribyrnong River frontage, with tennis facilities and walking tracks from the river that continue through the estate following the line of the old stockroute, lined with historic peppercorn trees. The new residential areas have been planned around a series of smaller-scaled open spaces, one of which is notable as the Women's Peace Park, to the west of Epsom Road. The open space spine formed by the stockman's route passes under Epsom Road and continues up to Racecourse Road.

[edit] Transport

Kensington is serviced by three railway stations:Kensington on the Craigieburn railway line to the north-western suburbs,South Kensington on the four lines serving the western suburbs (The Sydenham, Werribee and Williamstown lines) and Macaulay Station on the Upfield line serving the northern suburbs. The No. 57 tram serves the northern edge of Kensington on Racecourse Road (Flemington). The are two bus services: the 402 along Macaulay and Kensington Roads, and the 404 along Smithfield and Epsom Roads.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics (25 October 2007). Kensington (State Suburb). 2006 Census QuickStats. Retrieved on 2007-09-26.
  2. ^ Kensington, accessed 9 August 2007

[edit] External links

Localhero: History of Kensington